Discuss Hear Free Generative Music, in Archaic Twitter Haiku, made with SuperCollider in the News and Reviews forum at Sound Unsound Forums; How much can you do with a single line of musical code?
Scoring music using ...
Hear Free Generative Music, in Archaic Twitter Haiku, made with SuperCollider
How much can you do with a single line of musical code?
Scoring music using archaic-looking (but relatively fundamental) audio techniques, a group of composers has produced a free album. Each track, produced in the open source, multi-platform audio tool SuperCollider, is produced via only 140 characters of code. The work ranges from electronic grooves to droning ambiences to hypnotic melodic patterns… and yes, a few strange sounds. You can listen to the output as a conventional album, or if you install a copy of SuperCollider, you can run the code yourself – some of the tracks will sound different each time the code is executed.
The album, sc140, was released earlier in the fall but I didn’t get a chance to write about it; readers reminded me as the [Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br> brought a similar generative score-tweeting feature. Mixtikl’s approach is a little different; SuperCollider here is building sounds from scratch, whereas Mixtikl is tweeting higher-level information about a mix.
All of the code from the project is accessible, so this is an interesting way to learn about the capabilities of SuperCollider, and to find some of the commands you might want to understand if you’re delving in yourself.
If you’re not quite ready for writing code, the track audio is Creative Commons-licensed ([Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br> ), so you can sample the audio, as well.
[Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br>
[Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br> (who collaborated on this release)
[Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br>
Album curated by [Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br> .
How all this started: [Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br> , sharing code on Twitter
Lots of interesting artists in there, too, including [Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br> aka Hanns Holger Rutz, whose [Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br> I’ve been using.
For more SuperCollider coding insanity:
[Only registered and activated users can remove adverts and see links. ] br>